Mario Bros creator Miyamoto wins top Spanish prize

Nintendo's Shigeru Miyamoto, creator of Super Mario Bros, Donkey Kong and other hit video games (pictured in June 2011 in Los Angeles), won a top Spanish prize Wednesday for "revolutionizing" the industry

Nintendo's Shigeru Miyamoto, creator of Super Mario Bros, Donkey Kong and other hit video games, won a top Spanish prize Wednesday for "revolutionising" the industry.

The jury of Spain's prestigious Prince of Asturias Prize conferred a 50,000 euro ($64,000) award for communications and humanities on the 59-year-old Miyamoto.

It praised the Japanese game designer for "excluding violence from his creations" and turning video games into "a medium capable of bringing people together regardless of sex, age or social or cultural status."

The award is one of eight given in different fields by the Asturias Foundation each year. In addition to the cash, winners receive a sculpture designed by the late Catalan artist Joan Miro.

Miyamoto said he was "very honoured" and "humbled" to receive the award.

"I will continue my efforts so that video games will continuously be able to offer fun and joy to people of all generations all around the world," he added in a statement.

Miyamoto has created over 100 games and is widely seen as the world's most influential games designer.

Described as the Steven Spielberg of the game world for his visionary designs, his game Mario Bros is the most sold video game in history with sales of 275 million copies worldwide, including over 40 million copies of Super Mario Bros.

Miyamoto is responsible for the first video game made entirely in 3D -- Super Mario 64 -- as well as the first console with two separate screens, one of which is a touchscreen -- the Nintendo DS.

Among his other creations is Wii Fit home exercise game, the first major video game controlled by the movement of the body, and Wii Music, a composition game now used in schools around the world.

"With these creations, he has converted the video game into a social revolution and has managed to popularise it among a sector of the population that had not previously accessed this kind of entertainment," the jury said.

"Noted for excluding violence from his creations, Miyamoto has revolutionized the industry," it added in a statement.

Born in Sonobe in Kyoto, Miyamoto joined Nintendo in 1977 after studying industrial design.

A lover of both design and music, his first success was in 1981 with the launch of Donkey Kong, in which a scaffold-climbing carpenter rescues a young woman from a gorilla.

In 1986 he came up with The Legend of Zelda.

Described as a high fantasy action adventure game involving the constant rescue of Princess Zelda, Miyamoto was inspired by the lakes, caves and forests around his house where he would spend hours playing.

The communication and humanities prize is awarded to an individual or institution whose work "represents a significant contribution to universal culture".

Previous winners of the prize have included Google, the National Geographic Society and Cable News Network (CNN).

Last year it was awarded to Britain's centuries-old science institute The Royal Society.

Miyamoto was one of 21 candidates from 11 countries in the race for this year's prize.

Named after Crown Prince Felipe, the awards are presented in the northern Spanish city of Oviedo, capital of the northern Asturias region, in a glittering ceremony broadcast live on Spanish television.